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Monday, February 18, 2013

Nocturnes, Night Plein Air painting in London (No 2)

This is another nocturne plein air I have done in London. This particular one was done on 2, 10" x 8" boards. I started off the first one then I thought it didn't justify the scene, so I decided to add another 10" x 8" board to it.

Trafalgar Square at Night, 20" x 8", Oil on board

These are some other shots of the painting session in progress.

The First session in progress.

As I must have mentioned before, painting at night is a brilliant exercise, the light remains constant and if you've got great surrounding light around from street lamps and possibly a head lamp- the job at hand would be made much easier!

At this point I had added the second board.

Some people have often asked how I get my pictures taken. Well, while painting in London, so many people stand and watch for hours while the painting is in progress, a lot of people love to take pictures too, especially tourists. It's from these folk that I politely ask for them to take me a picture too. I show them exactly what I want and they are always more than willing to help. When I don't see these guys, I basically keep asking until someone agrees. I have also devised a plan of taking myself, I used this technique while Painting in Bath but they normally make me look a bit foreshortened. But they are better than not having a picture at all.

This is the finished piece with the scene

The Pochade box I am using was made by Guerilla Painter, this particular one is the 6" x 8" Thumbox. It has some extensions that make it also useful for 8" x 10" work.

SPECIAL QUOTE

"Areas of light can occur as pinpoints in a night scene, such as
streetlights or car headlights, or as a broad pane of light in the
window of a house, so it is necessary to carefully compose using them.
It is easy to end up with a piece that looks spotty, with points of
light scattered in a disjointed way all over the painting. Design with
the thought of how the viewer’s eye will move through the piece.

Remember that the area where the lightest light and the darkest dark
come closest together will draw the eye first and become the focal point
of the piece. Sometimes in a dark painting the largest area of light
will become the focal point, such as a large window where the light
pours out. Be sure that in either of these cases that the visual pathway
formed by any other points of light compliments and reinforces this
focal point, rather than drawing the eye away.

Light areas in a night painting are the perfect place to use exciting
colors, such as the sulphur yellow and lime green of the lighted square
in Van Gogh’s painting. The contrast of dark surrounding the light
accentuates it, making it a special feature of your painting. Different
kinds of bulbs cast light of varying hues. Incandescent bulbs are warm
and yellowish, fluorescent light is generally cool and neon light is
intense.

All bright lights at night have a slight halo, a softening of the edges
where the light seems to hang in the air. The night air is somewhat
moist and this vapor holds the light inside it. The larger the light and
the wetter the night, the bigger the halo tends to be. Technically you
can achieve this effect by saving an area in the dark plane where the
light will be, then laying in a medium color, perhaps a red, and
blending it slightly into the surrounding darkness. Then add a layer of a
medium-light color, depending on the color of the light itself, and
allow the color beneath to show at the edges. A final touch of the
lightest color in the center, usually very light yellow or white,
simulates the brilliance of the light shining in the darkness."- From an Article on Night Painting (source not mentioned) (c) Deborah Christensen Secor

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"Drawing is everything. When I was sixteen, I made over 400 drawings during that winter and spring. I drew mostly with a 2B pencil on typewriter paper. I drew during every spare moment. I’m heartened when I see your sketchbooks and see the way you’re always drawing at the Concept workshops. You remind me of me. When I was teaching university, I was disheartened by students who hadn’t paid their drawing dues, for unless you practice, you simply don’t know how to make lovely lines."-William Whitaker"Drawing is the basis of everything. All the way through the painting you must be questioning the drawing, right up to the very end. Otherwise you get the drawing right and fill it in with colour. As long as you get the effect you want, that's the important thing. You can use a piece of rag, a sable brush, a hoghair brush or a knife - it doesn't matter what."

PLEIN AIR

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About Me

I am a little bloke with a big heart. I love the LORD cos he made me what I am today. I have a wonderful wife Ruth and a budding painter boy JOSH! He is 7 and a little girl who is 3!
I love sketching the human face, especially the people I meet from day to day, people I may never meet again!
So I sieze the opportunity, it's something that keeps me loving the place we all share.